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The amount of money that a woman will spend on menstrual products in her lifetime is within the region of £20,000, according to The Independent; it's an exorbitant price that many families across the UK may never be able to meet.

Ewan Gunn, a Trussell Trust anti-poverty campaigner, said that some girls use newspaper or toilet paper instead of proper towels simply because they cannot afford them.

"Schools and colleges will provide condoms for something that you can abstain from, but you cannot abstain from having your period,” Gunn told BBC Radio Scotland. “We need to find a way that we can provide for this issue right now."

The issue affects girls' education as well as their health and wellbeing. Reports from Leeds indicated that some girls are forced to skip school because they cannot afford menstrual products. All the while, a luxury “tampon tax” is paid for those who can.

Director Ken Loach highlighted the struggle in the 2016 Bafta-winning film “I, Daniel Blake”, when a female character was caught shoplifting sanitary products in a supermarket. It’s since provoked a flurry of conversation on period poverty in the House of Commons and House of Lords.

“We are seeing initiatives like this occurring within many different pockets of society, and I will always welcome such schemes,” said Ida Tin, CEO of female health app Clue, to HuffPost. “It would be wonderful if this were to be piloted throughout the UK, but also in the US, in Germany, in Spain. It would be ideal for this to be commonplace across the globe.”

Not a single woman or girl should go without satisfactory sanitary products. Scotland once again leads from the front, but it’s vital that the rest of the world now follows suit.